Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing leader yesterday refused to scrap a controversial plan to allow extraditions to the Chinese mainland, a day after record crowds came out to oppose the proposal. 
Striking a defiant tone after the city’s largest protest since the 1997 handover, chief executive Carrie Lam said the legislature would debate the bill on tomorrow as planned, rejecting calls to delay or withdraw the law.
 The decision sets her administration on a collision course with opponents who decried her stance and called on supporters to rally outside parliament tomorrow or hold strikes.  “She’s really pushing Hong Kong towards the brink of a precipice,” pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo told reporters.
 Sunday saw huge crowds march in blazing summer heat through the streets of the financial hub’s main island in a noisy, colourful demonstration calling on the government to scrap its planned extradition law. Organisers said as many as a million people turned out — the largest protest in three decades and the biggest by far since the city’s return to Chinese rule. Lam’s government is pushing a bill through the legislature that would allow extraditions to any jurisdiction with which it does not already have a treaty — including mainland China.
 Authorities say it is needed to plug loopholes and to stop the city being a bolthole for fugitives. But the proposals have birthed an opposition that unites a wide cross-section of the city, with critics fearing the law will entangle people in China’s opaque and politicised courts.
In her first comments since the mass rallies, Lam pushed back against calls to delay the law and said the huge rallies were proof Hong Kong’s freedom of speech was still protected. She said her administration had already made major concessions to ensure political cases would not be considered and that human rights safeguards met international standards. “We have been listening and listening very attentively,” she said.  But her words drew an incredulous response from opponents who accused her of ignoring massive public opposition.
 “Yesterday 1.03mn of us marched and the government is still indifferent, turning a deaf ear to the people. This government has become a dictatorship,” lawmaker Ip Kin-yuen told reporters. Political analyst Dixon Sing warned Lam could be facing “political suicide” if she pushed for a showdown after such huge demonstrations. 
“In the short run, the Hong Kong government led by Carrie Lam will suffer a worsening legitimacy crisis,” he told AFP. “Fewer and fewer people will trust her and the entire cabinet.”
 But he said much would rest on whether the public comes out to back further protests or strikes. Sunday’s huge rally passed without incident until shortly after midnight when small pockets of protesters fought running battles with police in chaotic and violent scenes. Nineteen people were arrested, police said, mostly young men in their early twenties.
 Hong Kong authorities said they believed the violence at the end of the largely peaceful protests was planned by organised groups. “It’s easy to tell they are organised, premeditated, prepared, radical and violent people,” said Li Kwai-wah, senior superintendent of the Organized Crime And Triad Bureau. There was a heavy police presence outside parliament yesterday as officials moved twisted remains of barricades and debris left by the skirmishes the night before.
Hong Kong has been convulsed by political unrest in recent years as fears soar that a resurgent Beijing is trying to quash the international financial hub’s unique freedoms and culture. 
Under the 50-year handover deal with the British, China agreed to a “one country, two systems” model where Hong Kong would keep freedom of speech and assembly rights that are unheard of on the authoritarian mainland.
 But many locals believe Beijing is now reneging on that deal, aided by the city’s loyalist local government, especially since Xi Jinping became China’s leader. In 2014 mass democracy protests calling for the right to directly elect Hong Kong’s leader paralysed parts of the city for more than two months with frequent clashes between police and demonstrators.
 Two years later violent clashes broke out in the crowded district of Mongkok when police tried to close down unlicensed street vendors. Key protest leaders have since been jailed or barred from politics. Many young Hong Kongers have hardened their attitudes towards China after failing to win any concessions since the 2014 protests and the violence after Sunday’s rally fits a now familiar pattern. China yesterday strongly backed the Hong Kong government and voiced opposition to “outside interference”.
 Beijing “will continue to firmly support” the Hong Kong administration, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said, adding that the government will “firmly oppose any outside interference in the legislative affairs” of the city. In an editorial, Beijing’s state-run China Daily called the law a “sensible, legitimate” piece of legislation, and said “some Hong Kong residents have been hoodwinked by the opposition camp and their foreign allies into supporting the anti-extradition campaign”.
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